Biography: life and films
Yves Allégret was born on 13th October 1905 in
Asnières-sur-Seine, France. He was the younger brother of
the film director Marc Allégret, who gave him his first job as an
assistant on
Les Amours de minuit
(1931). Before he began making his own films, he worked in
various capacities with several distinguished film directors of the
time, most notably as an assistant to Jean Renoir on
Partie de campagne
(1936). The influence of Renoir's impressionistic style can be
seen in many of Allégret's films. Yves Allégret also
worked as a costume designer on Claude Autant-Lara's
Ciboulette (1933) and screenwriter
on two films for Léo Joannon:
Vous n'avez rien à déclarer?
(1937) and
L'Émigrante
(1940). He associated himself with the surrealists (another key
artistic influence) and joined the Groupe Octobre, a left-wing theatre
troupe of the 1930s, whose members included Jacques Prévert,
Jean-Louis Barrault and Claude Autant-Lara. Around this time, he
started making short films, including:
Ténériffe (1932),
Prix et profits ou La pomme de terre
(1934) and
Jeunes filles en France
(1934). He was about to embark on his first full-length film when
he was called up, following the declaration of war in 1939.
In 1941 Yves Allégret directed his first feature, a comedy
titled
Tobie est un ange,
starring Janine Darcey, Pierre Brasseur and Rellys; sadly the negative
of the film was destroyed in a fire. His next short film was
extended into a full-length film,
Les
Deux timides, which he released in 1943 under the name Yves
Champlain. This was followed by the comedy
La Boîte aux rêves
(1945) and a war film,
Les
Démons de l'aube (1946). Allégret then
directed the three films which brought him immediate critical attention
and established his reputation as a serious filmmaker:
Dédée
d'Anvers (1948),
Une si jolie petite plage
(1949) and
Manèges
(1950). This was to be the creative highpoint of
Allégret's career, a trilogy of film noir masterpieces that
combined the bleak poetic realist style of the 1930s with the
present-day fad for existentialism. Two of the films star Simone
Signoret, to whom Yves Allégret was married between 1944 and
1949; their daughter Catherine Allégret would become a
well-known actress. Allégret's association with the
existentialist movement was reinforced when he made
Les
Orgueilleux (1953), an impressive adaptation of Jean-Paul
Sartre's novel
Typhus.
After this brief but inspired period, Yves Allégret's career
showed a marked decline and comprised mainly populist genre films such
as
Chien de pique (1960), a
limp vehicle for Eddie Constantine, and
Quand la femme s'en mêle (1957),
the film in which Alain Delon made his screen debut (as a hired
hitman). Allégret was able to partly redeem himself
with a few hard-hitting realist dramas -
La Meilleure part (1955) and
Germinal (1963) - but his best work
was long behind him and he was soon forgotten by the critics. One
possible explanation for Allégret's sudden creative decline in
the mid-1950s was the tragic loss of his son Gilles, who was killed in
a car accident at the age of 19 in 1955. Towards the end of his
career, Allégret worked on several series for French television,
including:
Graine d'ortie
(1973) and
Les Enquêtes du
commissaire Maigret (1979-1981). His final film was the
lacklustre comedy
Mords pas, on
t'aime (1976) which starred his daughter Catherine - an
ignominious end to a career that promised so much more. Yves
Allégret died in Paris on 31st January 1987. He is buried
alongside his third wife Michèle Cordoue in the cemetary of
Jouars-Pontchartrain,Yvelines, on the outskirts of Paris.
© James Travers 2012
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